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Friday, January 30, 2009

Conservative drumbeat against stimulus continues



HOW TO BEAT THE STIMULUS PACKAGE


By DICK MORRIS

Published on DickMorris.com on January 30, 2009

The same way Republicans beat it when Bill Clinton proposed a modest $35 billion stimulus in the teeth of the 1992-1993 recession. The GOP nitpicked each spending item and highlighted midnight basketball courts and swimming pools that were funded in the package. Clinton, for his part, didn't really care what the money was being spent on, he wanted to be sure it was spent to give the economy a boost before he cut spending and raised taxes to balance the budget. So, the president accommodated all of the pet projects of Democratic lawmakers. The resulting publicity made the package radioactive.

Republicans are ideologically opposed to spending, but they never met a tax cut they didn't like, except a payroll tax cut, which would help the vast majority of the nation's wage earners. Republicans view wage earners with contempt.

Republicans should feature each element of the package -- just as they have highlighted the contraception and global warming research -- to show it for the boondoggle that it is.

Time to engage the Hollywood and Madison Avenue imagemakers, who are the natural allies of Democrats, to counter Republican propaganda on this.

The package is losing support almost daily. According to Rasmussen, only 42% of Americans now support it. The key is for the Republicans to attack its specific line items to show how overblown it really is.

And it is terribly important to beat, or at least cut back the stimulus legislation. What we allocate in deficit spending and "refundable" tax cuts (i.e. welfare) today we will pay for in inflation tomorrow.

Not true. Inflation would only be a cause for concern if the economy is running at full capacity, where all of its resources and capital--including human capital--are being used. We are far from that. Inflation has nothing to do with the nominal level of bank reserves in the system and is not, as we often hear, a monetary phenomenon.

In the seven years between 2000 and 2007, the money supply rose from $600 billion to $800 billion. In 2008, alone, it more than doubled from $800 billion to $1.7 trillion! We cannot sustain this level of increase in the money supply without having way too much money chasing way too few goods and services, sending prices up into double digit inflation.

He seems to be confusing the monetary base (Federal Reserve notes, coins and bank reserves) with money supply (M1, M2). Bank reserves, which represent the largest component in the monetary base, are not part of the money supply. Morris doesn't understand this. Furthermore, he doesn't understand that the Fed targets interest rates and it does this by manipulating reserves. To achieve a 0% Fed funds rate, reserves have to be increased significantly and kept high for as long as the Fed wants the 0% rate.

While the economy is in shell shock, at the moment, we face deflation. But once it begins to come back and the dollars come out of hiding, we will find the resulting inflation intractable and very difficult to cure.

This is his opinion and not a fact. It also fails to realize that the sale of Treasuries will bring the level of reserves down. It's already happening. And it fails to understand that the current tax structure automatically produces rising levels of fiscal drag as the economy grows faster, just as it automatically acts as a stabilizer when the economy contracts.

Q4 GDP -3.8%



Quick details below

Q4/ Y-O-Y
GDP -3.80% / 1.30%
Consumption -3.50% /0.30%
Investment -12.30%/ -5.90%
Gov't 1.90% / 2.90%
Net Exports NA / NA

WSJ article on Peter Schiff is out!



The Wall Street Journal article on Peter Schiff is out. Go here to read it.

Some excerpts:

Early last year, Richard De Gennaro, a retired Harvard University librarian, put $100,000, about 15% of his assets, into a Euro Pacific account that included Canadian Oil Sands Trust, which focuses on crude-oil projects in Canada, and the India Capital Growth Fund, which holds investments in companies that do business in India.

Both investments took big hits in 2008, compounded by the fact that the Canadian dollar and the Indian rupee fell 18% and 19%, respectively, against the U.S. dollar. The 83-year-old retiree's account is now worth about $37,000, a 63% plunge. Mr. Schiff "goes around saying that he was right," says Mr. De Gennaro. "He was right about one thing and wrong about everything else."

Among investors who turned to Mr. Schiff's firm just as his strategy began to falter, Brian Kullberg, a design engineer in Portland, Ore., says he started to worry about the state of the U.S. economy in early 2008. He put $70,000 into a Euro Pacific account, hoping it would benefit as the U.S. economy and the dollar weakened. By late January 2009, his investment had shrunk to about $25,000.

Most had one thing in common last year: heavy losses. A number of investors said their Euro Pacific portfolios lost 50% or more in 2008, worse than the 38% drop in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index last year. People familiar with the firm say that hardly any securities recommended by Euro Pacific brokers gained ground in 2008.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Taxpayers are making money. But are they?



Please read the brilliant post from Warren Mosler's website, then see my comments that follow.

"With the Fed balance sheet at just over $2 trillion and an average coupon of maybe 3% that means they are removing about $60 billion a year of interest income from the non government sectors.

So while I do think lower long term rates serves public purpose, I also recognize the need to cut taxes and/or increase other government spending to reverse the restrictive nature of that policy.

This applies to all Fed rate cuts that remove income from the non government sectors."


The record expansion of the Fed's balance, which was driven by the buying of assets, will result in a windfall profit. Warren Mosler estimates that it could be in the neighborhood of $60 billion, which would be about two or three times what the Fed ordinarily earns in one year.

So, isn't this a huge profit for the taxpayers? After all, the Fed is required by law to turn over all of its profits to the U.S. Treasury (with the exception of what it needs to operate).

All the genius media commentators, lawmakers and economists who complained for so long that the Fed's balance sheet expansion represented a huge "risk to taxpayers" are clueless that the Fed is about to make more money than it ever has.

In other words, taxpayers are getting a huge payday. Right?

Wrong!

Here is where the real irony is. By definition, if the Treasury is receiving this money, it is money that would have been paid out to the public. So the $60 billion profit that the Fed made actually represents a net drain of $60 billion in income that would have gone to the public!

Looking out for taxpayer money, in the end, means that taxpayers really lose.

Don't expect anyone but a very small group of economists to understand this.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Robert Rubin Says ‘Mark-to-Market’ has Done ‘Damage’



Another Rubin legacy, "mark-to-market" asset pricing. This should have been eliminated a long time ago. At least he admits now that it was a bad idea. However, how stupid would it be to remove bank assets to an aggregator bank at this point in time?? That's like selling out at the bottom. A year or two from now when the economy is back on track and asset prices are rising once again the banks will have to buy back those very same assets at much higher prices. Dumb!!!

Read full article here.

Immelt Stakes His Legacy on GE’s Ability to Keep Dividend, Aaa



I know it's never going to happen, but Jeff Immelt should be given a medal for standing up for long-time, loyal, shareholders. By not cutting the dividend even though he is under immense pressure from Wall Street and malicious speculators to do so, Immelt is displaying enormous courage and leadership values rarely seen in wimpy corporate execs these days.

In contrast, Pfizer's weasle CEO, Jeffrey Kindle, decided to punish loyal, longtime shareholders by cutting the dividend in half even though the company's balance sheet is far less stressed than that of GE's. He spit in the eye of so many who have stood by Pfizer for so long and nothing but a lame excuse for his actions.

If you are a Pfizer shareholder, as I am, voice your unhappiness with Mr. Kindle.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

OPEC Calls for Curbing Speculators, Blames Hedge Funds for Rout



It's sad when Opec has to tell U.S. lawmakers and regulators what correct policy should be regarding speculation, however, "free market fundamentalism" rules policymaking in the U.S.

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- OPEC wants U.S. regulators to curtail oil trading by hedge funds and speculators who helped make last year the most volatile in crude oil trading.

Abdalla el-Badri, secretary-general of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, is seeking rules to “limit the level of speculation” by investors who buy oil without planning to use it. Oil surged 46 percent in the first half of 2008 to a record $147.27 only to plunge by the end of the year, prompting OPEC to make its biggest ever supply cuts.

“OPEC has repeatedly called for the need to reduce the role of excessive speculative activity in the market,” el-Badri, who will attend this week’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, said in an e-mailed response to questions. “Today, it is impossible to know who is actually buying and selling oil futures.”

While congressional leaders proposed legislation to curtail speculation as rising oil caused gasoline to reach $4 a gallon last summer, regulators at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are divided over the role of hedge funds in last year’s surge in prices. A series of OPEC supply cuts failed to boost prices as demand weakened in what may be the worst global recession in the postwar era.

“The move above $90 a barrel was driven by financial flows rather than fundamentals” of supply and demand, said Edward Morse, chief economist at Louis Capital Markets in New York. Selling by speculators “helped propel the commodities price downturn, but fundamentals have weighed heavily as well.”


Full article on Bloomberg.

Cato Institute mounts full frontal attack against the stimulus



We may not get it!

“Notwithstanding reports that all economists are now Keynesians and that we all support a big increase in the burden of government, we do not believe that more government spending is a way to improve economic performance. More government spending by Hoover and Roosevelt did not pull the United States economy out of the Great Depression in the 1930s. More government spending did not solve Japan’s “lost decade” in the 1990s. As such, it is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that more government spending will help the U.S. today. To improve the economy, policy makers should focus on reforms that remove impediments to work, saving, investment and production. Lower tax rates and a reduction in the burden of government are the best ways of using fiscal policy to boost growth. Below you’ll find some recent Cato work on “stimulus” packages.”

Check it out at the link here.

They are extremely well organized and funded. Plus, opposition by Republicans in Congress mounting. And, inexplicably, Obama feels like he has to form a bipartisan consensus on this, despite getting nearly 64 million votes, a mandate, Democratic control of Congress and zero need to appease Republicans.

All we need now is another terror attack on U.S. soil and the folks who voted for Obama will be begging to have Bush back!

Shell Sells Oil Cargoes, Phibro Tanker Leaves Orkney



Jan. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Royal Dutch Shell Plc sold more than 1 million barrels of crude stored off the U.K. and a vessel hired by Citigroup Inc.’s Phibro LLC left its anchorage in Scotland for the U.S. as the incentive to keep oil in tankers disappears.

A sign of increasing demand for physical.

Shell sold two 600,000-barrel cargoes of North Sea Forties crude for delivery in mid-February at Scapa Flow near Scotland’s Orkney Islands to oil trader Vitol Group, the companies said. The oil, already on board the supertanker Oliva, has been anchored off the U.K. coast since at least December, according to Bloomberg vessel tracking data.

Vitol’s back in the game again after trying to run a corner last summer, until the CFTC got wind of it.

With regulatory fervor now all but gone, Vitol will lead the way for other specs and commercials pretending to be commercials, but really speculating.


Read story here.

As layoffs spread Obama seeks to form a bipartisan agreement on stimulus



Forty-thousand new layoffs were announced yesterday yet Obama is wasting time trying to forge a bipartisan consensus on the stimulus. Democrats have the votes to pass the measure now, but the president prefers to dawdle and try to placate resistant Republicans for what kind of long-term political support, I do not know. Meanwhile, American families suffer.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Peter Schiff's Clients Got Hosed This Year, Too



Some facts that should pop the aura surrounding Peter Schiff.

From Clusterstock.com

Sure his on-air sparring makes for some great TV. And his pointed criticism of the stimulus plan is spot on, especially at a time when people believe the answer to our pile of debt is to spend like crazy. But that doesn't mean Peter Schiff has been an amazing steward of his clients' cash.

Michael Shedlock punctures the Schiff aura, saying he's heard from several clients who claim losses of 40%-70% after investing with EuroPacificCapital. How could this be? Hasn't Schiff been bearish during a horrible year for US equities? Yes, but that negative on US equaties was just a part of his overall strategy

Shedlock sums Schiff's complete thesis:

US Equity Markets Will Crash.
US Dollar Will Go To Zero (Hyperinflation).
Decoupling (The rest of the world would be immune to a US slowdown.
Buy foreign equities and commodities and hold them with no exit strategy.


Schiff was correct about point number 1 above. The US equity markets crashed. That was a very good call. Unfortunately, his investment thesis centered on shorting the dollar in a hyperinflation bet, and buying foreign equities rather than shorting US equities.

Furthermore, Schiff made no allowances for being wrong and had no exit strategy whatsoever.

What happened in 2008 was that foreign equities sold off much harder than US equities, and a strengthening US dollar compounded the situation.

Bottom line: Not all doomsayers are going to make money in a bad investment. And you can be extremely sharp and insightful with your analysis, but it doesn't mean your investment theses will pan out. In fact, there's frequently a disconnect between people who call for doom and their actual results

Fed's balance sheet is shrinking



In the latest release of its weekly statement (Jan 22) the Fed's balance sheet is down about $200 billion ($2.1 trillion) from the peak back on January 2 ($2.3 trillion). About $130 billion of that reduction came from the Fed's foreign currency position, which is marked to the market. Are those currency losses? Where are the journalists, lawmakers, economists and other screaming about this? They only scream about help to American businesses and households, I guess. When it comes to losses on loans to foreign entities, nobody says anything.

Debunking Peter Schiff



Below is the letter I sent to the WSJ correcting the Peter Schiff column of last Friday. (I doubt mine will get published, but here it is.)



Debunking Peter Schiff

By Michael Norman

The article by Peter Schiff that appeared the other day in the Opinion section (The World Won't Buy Unlimited U.S. Debt, WSJ January 23, 2009) was so profoundly flawed in macroeconomic understanding that it’s hard to comprehend why the Journal would run such drivel.

It’s bad enough one man’s warped and backward view of economics gets this kind of attention, but what is most disturbing is that much of today’s policy has at its core, the same embrace of the myths and superstitions that drive Mr. Schiff’s view of the world.

According to the latest figures from the Bureau of the Public Debt, the national debt is $10.6 trillion, of which $6.3 trillion is held by the public. Roughly half of that amount is held by foreigners with China, Japan and all Oil Exporters (Saudis as well as others within OPEC) accounting for about $1.4 trillion. That’s about 22 percent of the total U.S. debt held by the public or 13 percent of the overall debt.

What’s important to understand, however, is that the national debt of the United States is small relative to other countries. As a percentage of GDP our debt is smaller than that of France, Germany, Canada, Italy and far, far smaller than that of Japan. And if you were to count only debt that is owed to the public, the U.S. debt would be almost insignificant in relation to much of the rest of the world. Yet this perspective is often not provided or worse, conveniently omitted by propagandists like Mr. Schiff.

Countries like China and Japan have long engaged in policies designed to support their export industries and exports remain an important part of their economies. It is no wonder, therefore, that they have accumulated big dollar reserves. The accumulation of dollars has been a consequence of a determined policy that favors exports as a means of creating jobs and sustaining aggregate demand.

The purchase of Treasury securities by foreign nations that export goods to the U.S. does not constitute the “funding” of America. The U.S. government offers an interest bearing account known as a Treasury security to anyone who wishes to exchange reserves (official or otherwise) for something that pays a higher return.

In the case of oil exporting nations their oil is priced in dollars so they naturally have accumulated dollars as a result of their oil sales. The Saudis or any other producers are free to price their oil in euro, yen or any currency they want. That is irrelevant. What is relevant is the currency they want to save in. If they sell oil in euro but net save in dollars, then nothing changes.

To say that foreigners cannot fund their own domestic spending initiatives or use the money to buy other assets because somehow they are obligated to buy our Treasuries is patently absurd. Countries like Japan and China have the choice to spend and invest domestically or continue supporting export driven growth, as do all sovereign nations. The latter choice has been their desire for decades, for reasons that are as much cultural as anything else. This could change as economic weakness causes them to consider boosting domestic investment in order to provide economic stimulus. Should this happen at the expense of their exports to the United States, then, yes, accumulation of dollar reserves will slow. However, this portends nothing.

What is lost on Mr. Schiff and many others who ponder the question of who is going to continue buying U.S. debt, is the fact that the money to buy Treasuries comes from government spending itself. Payments made by the Treasury, whether they go for the payment of social security, salaries to government employees, bailouts, infrastructure investment or deficit spending, result in an increase in reserves available to depository institutions. When the Treasury sells bills, notes and bonds, they are “paid for” with bank reserves that were put in the banking system as a result of that spending. The sale of Treasuries, therefore, is nothing more than a reserve maintenance operation and does not constitute borrowing, per se. The best way to think of a Treasury security is an interest bearing account offered by the government in exchange for the reserves already put in the banking system as a result of spending.

In practice, any sovereign currency-issuing nation whose money is not backed by gold or subject to some fixed exchange rate can spend all it wants. A nation that spends in its own currency, as the United States does, can never be said to be borrowing. The government could, if it wanted, eliminate all sales of Treasuries without any impact on its ability to spend and invest. Recently some economists have even been suggesting this because it would allow greater flexibility in dealing with the economic crisis. Instead of using Treasury sales to manage reserves the Fed could pay interest on reserve balances—something that it has recently started to do.

When Mr. Schiff states that “the problem is not that America will have difficulty getting enough from abroad to maintain our GDP,” but that scarce credit makes it “inevitable that GDP will fall,” he displays a complete lack of understanding of what constitutes GDP. In any basic textbook of economics you will find GDP indicated as follows:

GDP = C + I + G + NE

Where C equals personal consumption, I equals business investment, G equals government spending and investment and NE equal to net exports (exports minus imports). While it may be true that consumption is currently suffering due to scarce credit, a sufficient boost in government spending could offset that, causing overall GDP to rise.

This is why Nobel Laureate, Paul Krugman, along with many other respected economists, argue for a large fiscal stimulus. They correctly understand that government spending is an important component of GDP and something that can be increased quickly in order to bring output back up.

Furthermore, the United States does not, uniquely, have the ability to pull itself out of the mire simply because of the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency. Any country that spends in its own currency and where spending by government results in the increase in base money in the banking system can do the same. Severe austerity happens only in cases where countries are on a gold standard or under a fixed exchange rate regime. These arrangements have been disastrous in the past and it’s the reason why most of the world operates under a floating exchange rate, non-convertible currency system.

President Obama called for sacrifice yet Americans have already sacrificed, enormously. Eleven million people have lost their jobs and many more likely will. We are a nation where 43 million people are without health care but the services are there for them. Half the families in this country can’t afford to send their children to college when there is the space. Many retirees have seen the value of their savings cut in half. We have three million unsold cars, five million unsold homes and nearly thirty percent of our industrial capacity sits idle.

In short, many of the wealth producing assets of this nation are sitting idle for no good reason. In this regard Americans have sacrificed a lot and continue to sacrifice because of politics and policy weighed down by the same backward thinking as that of Mr. Schiff’s.

It is one thing to ask people to sacrifice in times of plenty or when war demands the ultimate sacrifice in defense of our nation. However, it is morally reprehensible to sit by and allow a nation’s citizens to suffer as much as they have when the means to end the suffering lies in our hands. There is no excuse for this. We are a nation of great abundance and plenty, but we choose deprivation because of a belief in myths and false dogmas.

Michael Norman is an economist and private investor.

Obama Woos Republicans on Stimulus, Seeking Longer-Term Support



This is another example of Obama's weak leadership by consensus. He won the election by a huge margin; Democrats control Congress. He has a mandate. Yet he prefers to build bipartisan support when he doesn't need it and when the Republicans' policies were totally repudiated by the voters.

Any "support" he garners from Republicans now will be fleeting. They will abandon him and blame him, first chance they get. It is a huge political mistake and it makes Americans suffer longer for no reason, particularly all those who voted for him. This is hard to understand. It can only be explained as insecurity on his part, which is a dangerous thing for the country. Other world leaders who are not America's friends might pick up on this and try to test how far he is willing to go.

Read article here.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Geithner Warning on Yuan May Renew U.S.-China Tension



"Timothy Geithner’s warning that President Barack Obama believes China is “manipulating” its currency..."

Here we go again!

This is terrible policy and a continuation of what the last administration was doing. No change whatsoever.

The U.S. believes that the solution to our "problem" lies in making America an export-driven economy like China, however, only way to accomplish this--to gain comparative advantage--is to bash our currency down relative to China's currency. Ultimately this results in a lower standard of living for Americans vis-a-vis the Chinese. It's gold standard thinking, but we are not on a gold standard anymore. Someone in Washington ought to wake up and recognize that.

Read article here.

France’s AAA Rating May Be Under Stress as Debt Rises, ING Says



The extra yield investors demand to hold 10-year French bonds instead of the benchmark German bunds widened to 57 basis points on Jan. 21, the most since the euro’s debut a decade ago. The average yield spread in the past 10 years was 8 basis points.

France is no longer a currency issuing nation, meaning that the government can no longer spend by simply crediting bank accounts. If the government needs money it must borrow--either from the savings of its citizens, or those of foreigners. This means the debt is a real problem and must somehow be financed. That is not the case of countries like the U.S. or Japan or Britain or any other sovereign currency issuer that can spend by merely crediting bank accounts. In these cases there is never a risk of a payments crisis, but in France there is. That risk is also present in the other Eurozone members.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Is it time to buy the British Pound?



The British pound has been falling since November 2007 and recently hit a 23 year low against the dollar. Is it time to buy?

Two contrarian indicators suggest that there may be an opportunity to play the pound from the long side.

First, as I mentioned in a post yesterday, Jim Rogers, who is cold as ice when it comes to his forecasts (shorting Treasuries, shorting the dollar, commodities, etc) recommended selling the pound the other day. Back in my days when I was a floor trader one popular trading tactic the savvy traders used to employ was "fading" traders in the pit who were on a cold streak. No one is colder than Rogers at this point in time, so it's probably a good idea to do the opposite of what he says.

The second contrarian indicator is Fox Business, which ran a story on its air yesterday about the weakness in the pound (see clip here). When Fox Business starts focusing on a theme, it's probably close to being over.

You can buy the pound via an ETF. That is the CurrencyShares British Pound Sterling Trust (FXB).

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Here's why mainstream economics lives in the wrong paradigm



Excerpts from a story that appeared in the Chicago Tribune.

John Cochrane, a professor at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, says that among academics over the last 30 years, the idea of fiscal stimulus has been discredited and in graduate courses, it is "taught only for its fallacies."

Like revisionism in history. The "Holocaust didn't exist," etc.

New York University economist Thomas Sargent agrees: "The calculations that I have seen supporting the stimulus package are back-of-the-envelope ones that ignore what we have learned in the last 60 years of macroeconomic research."

Nobel Laureate Gary Becker says any benefits will be modest at best.

For the government to finance infrastructure spending or tax cuts, it has to borrow money. The money is thus unavailable for private investment or consumption. Right now, companies and individuals are having trouble getting credit, which is a big reason for the downturn. But if the government borrows more, they will have an even harder time finding lenders. So the effort could be self-defeating.


That's a Nobel Laureate who doesn't understand that in a world of floating exchange rates/non-convertible currency, currency issuing governments spend by crediting bank accounts and the spending occurs BEFORE the sale of securities and the collection of taxes. Thus, gov't deficit spending ADDS to the net worth of the public in the form of higher holdings of Treasuries (which are assets), without any effect on the net financial position prior to that spending. Translation: it takes nothing away from the public's holdings of cash or other assets. Nor does it inhibit in any way the public's ability to invest their savings. If anything it adds to it because the government is a net payer of interest, meaning that the extent interest payments add to overall income, savings should be higher and, therefore, investment.

Remember, as stated in the Fed's manual: "A payment by the Treasury adds to the amount of reserves available to depository institutions." This dynamic is clearly stated right there and says, unequivocally, that spending by the Treasury ADDS to the money of the private sector.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Jim Rogers, desperate, turns his negative prognostications on the U.K.



After issuing numerous misguided sell signals on U.S. Treasuries and the dollar in the past four months, Jim Rogers is now turning bearish on the U.K. instead. (Perhaps hoping that it will work out better than his other ill-timed sell signals.)

Why anyone still listens to this guy is beyond me, however, he remains a media favorite especially over at Bloomberg.

In an interview today Rogers says, "the U.K. is finished" and he would "sell the pound." (Nevermind that the pound has already plunged to a 10-year low against the dollar and a record low against the euro.)

Rogers' rationale for predicting an end to the U.K? "The country is running out of oil so now they will have nothing to sell." (I kid you not, those were his exact words!)

Most investors, with the exception of the nimblest, have already been buried by his commodity predictions. Anyone left with any money after following his advice ought to be given a medal. Perhaps a Purple Heart.

Read interview here.

"There are no shortcuts or quick fixes to this crisis"



That quote, from President Barack Obama, appears on the OMB website. Disappointing to say the least. Perhaps the reason why Obama is so cautious is because his OMB chief, Peter Orszag--a noted fiscal conservative and deficit hawk--is pictured sitting right next to him. Orszag's concern over deficits is probably what keeps his boss from being more optimistic. It's discouraging.

Monday, January 19, 2009

More Americans Joining Military as Jobs Dwindle



I've long argued that the military is functioning to provide more and more of the social services, education, health care and jobs of this nation. We allow this because as a nation we are not comfortable with direct government funding of things things. We see deficits, or we view it as socialism, however, when it occurs in this stealth fashion--via the military--we are okay with that. It's a terribly inefficient way to go about providing these basic needs of society and it should be morally reprehensible to us that some young people will go to war and die when all they really wanted was an education, health care and a job. It's also not fair to the many professional soldiers, sailors, marines and airmen who dedicate their lives to a military career.

Read full article here.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

U.S. Gov't surpluses and deficits: An historical perspective



The Budget of the United States Gov't publication has historical tables on surpluses and deficits going back to 1789. You can access it here. Please go to page 21 of this publication to view the data.

You will notice that the most powerful periods of economic growth (post Civil War, 1920s and 1942-1946) were preceeded by massive deficit spending that occurred very rapidly.

For the economy to recover now we must see the same, perhaps in order of magnitude far greater than what is currently being proposed.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Fed should target stock prices, not interest rates



This is what I have been saying for some time.

"It is time for a greatly increased role for monetary policy through direct intervention of central banks in world stock markets to prevent bubbles and crashes. Central banks control interest rates by buying and selling securities on the open market.

A logical extension of this idea is to pick an indexed basket of securities: one candidate in the US might be the S&P 500, and to control its price by buying and selling blocks of shares on the open market.

Even the credible announcement that a policy of this kind was being considered should be enough to boost the markets and restore consumer and investor confidence in the real economy." -Prof. Roger Farmer


Read full article here.

Toyota, Facing Crisis, Turns to Founding Family Scion



Akio Toyoda, the grandson of Toyota Motor Corp.’s founder and the company’s next president, will confront a challenge largely unknown to his ancestors: decline.

But Toyoda won't be able to save the day for the company his grandfather founded because with the Japanese government no longer intervening to keep the yen weak and with Japan's markets far more open now than in past decades, Japanese automakers will begin to look eerily similar to Detroit's Big 3.

Without the help of protectionism and subsidies, Toyota, Nissan and Honda will lose their comparative advantage. In the end people will come to realize that the success of Toyota and other Japanese automakers had nothing to do with Detroit's cost structure or lack of competitiveness. It had everything to do with Japanese industrial and export policy.

Read article here.

A rare central banker who understands monetary operations



Former Bank of England policy maker Charles Goodhart says that English Prime Minister Gordon Brown should “sack the U.K. Debt Management Office and refrain from issuing government bonds as a way of bolstering the economy."

“The one single thing that I would like to see, in a sense to get us out of the present problem, would be very simple,” Goodhart told lawmakers on Parliament’s Treasury Committee. “It would be: sack the Debt Management Office and just not issue gilts for quite a long time so that the huge deficit simply comes into the system in the form of increases in liquidity and increases in the money supply.”

(Not issuing securities is functionally the same as keeping a zero interest rate target.)

At least this guy understands that issuing Gilts (or Treasuries, in the case of the U.S.) is not borrowing, but merely a reserve maintenance activity. However, reserve maintenance can be accomplished by paying interest on reserves. There is no need to issue securities at all.

Read full article here.

Bloomberg: Ireland’s Cowen May Call in IMF If Economy Worsens, RTE Says



Later denied by the Irish PM, but scary nonetheless. It's going that way.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

U.S. Trade Gap Narrows to 5-Year Low on Import Slump



According to the debt-doomsday crowd we should all feel a lot better now that the trade deficit has been cut in half. So how come things feel a lot worse?

The trade deficit was never a reflection of the health or vitality of the U.S. economy. Rather, it was a function of economic policy engaged in by U.S. trading partners and the fact that the dollar was held as the world's reserve currency. Both were major factors that drove the trade deficit.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Student auctions off virginity to pay for school



Student auctions off virginity for offers of more than $3.7 million!

This is the great United States of America, where kids who can't afford school have to become prostitutes to pay for it. We don't let the government pay because of the deficit! I guess the fiscal conservatives view this as better than running a deficit. Morally repulsive!!

Maybe those who want health care but can't afford should do the same. At least it would be a "free market" solution.

Read full story here.

Friday, January 9, 2009

The $38 Billion Shadow Stimulus



While a new Congress and a new White House debate details of an economic stimulus plan, Social Security recipients are already reaping a $38 billion windfall.

The extra money comes thanks to a quirk in the Social Security Administration's regularly scheduled cost of living adjustment.

Every year, Social Security payments increase along with the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers. The increase is set at whatever the change in inflation was between July and September from one year to the next.


The program that so many hate and call broken, is one of the few things helping to sustain the economy and keeping millions of people from experiencing real economic hardship and depression. If fiscal conservatives get their way the U.S. will privatize Social Security and the results could be disastrous as retirement savings are exposed to the vagaries of the stock market. Remember what happened to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac once they were privatized.

Rifts show as Obama urges quick action on stimulus



Democrats such as Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad complained openly that many of the incoming administration's proposed tax cuts wouldn't work. Republicans warned against excessive new spending, with both parties signaling the incoming president they intend to place their own stamp on the economic recovery effort.

"Doing things that would have a permanent effect when we face trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see is just unwise," Conrad said.

Ominous developments, but just as I have been predicting.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Weekly jobless claims fall to 467k



In the week ending January 3 claims for weekly unemployment insurance dropped 24k to 467k. This is the lowest level since October 11 and suggests that tomorrow's nonfarm payroll report will not be as bad as expected.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Obama: Good Cop, Bad Cop



Ever since his election victory Obama's been switching back and forth between the roles of the Good Cop and the Bad Cop.

When he plays the Good Cop and talks about the need for massive stimulus without regard for deficits or fiscal prudence the stock market rallies.

But on the days when he plays the Bad Cop and talks about controlling spending and being fiscally responsible, the market tanks.

Today he created the new White House post of "Chief Performance Officer," a term with private sector connotations if there ever was one. That person will be charged with the task of overseeing all areas of federal spending and seeing where there is "waste and inefficiency."

Embodied in this position and indeed, the very concept of this position, is the notion that government should be run like a business--lean, mean and profitable. The problem with this is that it removes from the public sector all counterbalance to the private sector, which is extremely troubling now that the nation is experiencing a severe economic downturn. It is precisely during times like these that the government must "lean against the wind" and not blow with it.

Promoting thrift and efficiency is a good goal for government if the nation's resources, capital and assets are all being fully employed and its citizens are living at their highest potential.

But granting a bureaucrat the power to arbitrarily single out spending programs when the economy suffers from a lack of demand, rather than excess, is like putting an anorexic on a diet.

Today Obama is the Bad Cop. Today the market is down big.

Obama names special watchdog for federal spending



More examples of fiscal conservatives setting the agenda.

Obama creating a new White House post: "Chief Performance Officer."

Definitely sounds like a private sector concept. Embodies the concept of government as a profit seeking enterprise. This is bad.

"President-elect Barack Obama said Wednesday that reforming massive government entitlement programs -- such as Social Security and Medicare -- would be "a central part" of his effort to control federal spending."

With...

Over 3 million unsold cars
Over 5 million unsold homes
10 million people without a job
Only 70 percent industrial capacity use
40 million people without health care, but the services there for them
Half the families in America that can't afford to send their kids to college but the space is there for them

It is IMPOSSIBLE for the government to overspend.

Fiscal vigilance now is like limiting calorie intake for a dying anorexic!

Satyam Chairman: We're Just a Gigantic Fraud, Too



Amazing.

One of India's biggest companies and a darling of investors through the boom. Just another ponzi scheme!

And you probably thought Madoff was an isolated case. Starting to appear like there may be many, many, more like him.

Unreal!

Read article here.

Stimulus aside, Obama vows future budget restraint



Obama balances massive stimulus with talk of long-term budget belt-tightening


As long as fiscal conservatives continue to have a vice grip on economic policy, we will repeat, endlessly, this pattern of several years' recovery followed by slump or crisis because of fiscal drag. Keynes called it, "Running in a state of perpetual, semi slump."

Read story here.

Russia stops all gas supply to Europe via Ukraine



Free market, eh?

Heating oil prices will soar as alternatives sought to replace nat gas for winter heating. This will drive up entire energy complex. Specs to pile on.

Expect the media to miss this story altogether and blame rising energy prices on the Israel-Hamas conflict.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Russian Dispute With Ukraine Worsens, Hitting Europe



Anyone who thinks the oil market is a "free market" is seriously delusional. The two largest producers--OPEC and Russia--have enormous power over prices. Russia's curtailment of gas supplies to a large swath of Europe in the middle of winter is causing a scramble for other heating fuels, like heating oil, and that is driving up the entire energy complex. Speculators add to this buying pressure.

CNN Money: Bonds in 2009: Mass Exodus Ahead?



There has been a feeding frenzy by journalists on the subject of trying to pick a top in bonds. All the wrong analysis. Bonds will fall when the Fed decides it wants rates back up. Not sooner.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Obama predicts quick approval of econ rescue plan



Wonderful if he delivers, however, I am just wondering if he has spoken to Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) yet, or the other Senate Republicans who are prepared to obstruct any quick passage of this stimulus.

It's one thing to have an enthusiastic meeting with your buddies on the same team, like Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, however, something tells me that Obama's statement about "quick passage" is more political strategy than anything else. If the stimulus doesn't pass quickly he can always blame it on the Republicans.

Banks’ ‘Catatonic Fear’ Means Consumers Don’t Get TARP Relief



Some banks may have needed more capital but most did not need the Treasury's infusions in order to lend. In fact, all the big banks--Citi, JP Morgan, Bank of America, Wells Fargo--were pretty much forced by the Treasury to take the money. Yet before the, "We're gonna make you an offer you can't refuse," action by the government, lending was not being constrained by an insufficiency of capital.

Rather, lending was and is being hampered by a weak economy, severe job losses and declining asset values.

Those are not things that will be fixed by giving fresh capital to banks. Nor will lending resume in earnest just because interest rates are historically low.

The key is to stimulate demand in the economy and the only way to do that now is via fiscal measures. The government must spend or give money to households and businesses--either directly or thru tax cuts--in order to prime the pump and get the economy moving again. Only then will credit begin to flow anew.

Lending is pro-cyclical. That's why the Fed is calling for a big stimulus



The Fed is beginning to see that interest rates have little bearing on loan creation. The chart below shows how bank loans are growing more slowly now despite the Fed's actions to reduce rates.


Total loans and leases at all commercial banks (y-o-y % change)

Loan creation is a function of the economy. In a weak economy loan demand will be flat to down and the Fed is beginning to understand this. That is why the Fed is calling for a big fiscal stimulus.

Oil rises above $47 as OPEC cutbacks take hold



For all those who believe in a "free market." A cartel ultimately can set prices wherever it wants. By the way, the Russians are now in the process of doing the same thing with gas.

Most disturbing is the fact that Congress did nothing to reign in speculation when it had the chance back in July. Conservative Republicans killed that. Expect the specs to come back in on the long side and push prices back up again. This time, don't expect OPEC to be quick on reversing their output cuts. They may let oil go to $200 first.

Fed Officials Endorse ‘Big Stimulus’ to Battle U.S. Recession



San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen said yesterday at an economics conference in San Francisco that “it’s worth pulling out all the stops” with an economic recovery package. Charles Evans, president of the Chicago Fed, told the same gathering he believes a “big stimulus is appropriate.”

The markets want one too!

But it makes no difference what Obama, the Fed and the markets want. It's up to Congress and it will not pass in the size sought, nor will it pass anytime soon.

Hobbes was right to reject separation of powers in his definition of legitimate government. The central authority must have control of executive, judicial AND legislative power. Congress is more trouble than it is worth.

Italian Pensions Sapped by Private Funds Bush Backed



"Italy did for retirement financing what President George W. Bush couldn’t do in the U.S.: It privatized part of its social security system. The timing couldn’t have been worse. The global market meltdown has created losses for those who agreed to shift their contributions from a government severance payment plan to private funds meant to yield higher returns."

How ironic. Italy of all places, long known for its entrenched socialism, embraces what many U.S. leaders have been promoting--privatizing social security--and it proves to be a horrific failure.

This won't stop conservatives from trying to foist the same disastrous scheme upon Americans.

Key Democrat: No stimulus by inauguration



“It’s going to be very difficult to get the package put together that early,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland said. “But we certainly want to see this package passed through the House of Representatives no later than the end of this month, get it over to the Senate, and have it to the president before we break” in mid-February.

Unreal! More people will die. (The crime rate/murder rate is a function of the economy.) Congress has already left people in the lurch for two and a half months, now they are saying, "You'll have to wait longer."

This could bring some renewed weakness to the stock market.

It increasingly looks like Hobbes had it right in his rejection of separation of powers when it comes to governments. Assmeblies, such as the U.S. Congress, does more harm than good.